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Wrongly Convicted Woman Declared Innocent, Set To Collect $600K From State

TORRANCE (AP) — A woman who spent 17 years in a California prison for a murder she didn't commit was declared factually innocent Friday, clearing the way for her to collect about $600,000 in compensation from the state.

Susan Mellen, 59, said she was "so grateful" for the ruling that came about six weeks after her conviction was overturned and she was released from state prison.

"I feel really badly about what happened here," Judge Mark Arnold said.

Arnold overturned Mellen's conviction in the 1997 beating death of a homeless man because she was poorly represented at trial and a woman who claimed to have heard Mellen confess was a habitual liar.

Mellen's conviction in orchestrating the killing of Richard Daly at a Lawndale home where she and others lived was based on witness testimony.

Deputy District Attorney Loren Naiman, who didn't handle the case at trial, said the incriminating testimony was doubtful and asked the judge to set aside the conviction.

Three gang members later were linked to the crime, and one took a lie detector test and said Mellen wasn't there.

Mellen's case was taken up by Deirdre O'Connor, head of Innocence Matters, which seeks to exonerate the wrongly convicted. O'Connor said the detective who arrested Mellen also was responsible for a case in 1994 that resulted in two convicts later being exonerated.

The declaration of factual innocence is rare. It allows Mellen, who left prison broke, to claim $100 from the state for every day she spent behind bars.

Mellen said she cried every night in prison but never lost faith she would be reunited with her three grown children. She scrawled the word "freedom" on the bottom of her shoes because she planned to one day walk free.

On Friday, she was not only free, but innocent.

(Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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